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1

Szeemann, Harald. LightSeed : Cy Twombly, Wolfgang Laib, Michel Verjux. Tokyo: Watari-Um, 1991.

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2

illustrator, Butler John 1952, ed. Little lamb. New York, New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2014.

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3

ill, Butler John 1952, ed. Wee little lamb. New York, N.Y: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2009.

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4

Duchesneau, Claude. Music and liturgy: The Universa Laus document and commentary / Claude Duscheneau, Michel Veuthey ; translated by Paul Inwood. Washington, D.C: Pastoral Press, 1992.

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5

Fabian, Jack. History of Companions of Christ the Lamb. Paradise, Mich: Companions of Christ the Lamb, 1998.

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6

Dennis, Simone. For the love of lab rats: Kinship, humanimal relations, and good scientific research. Amherst, NY: Cambria Press, 2011.

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7

Heimatverein für Wasserburg am Inn und Umgebung (Historischer Verein), ed. Wasserburger Bildhauer des Barock: David Zürn, Martin und Michael Zürn, Gregor Pichler, Jeremias Hartmann, Jakob Laub, Adam Hartmann, Georg Ferdinand Hartmann, Simon Judas Thaddäus Hartmann, Franz Josef Aichhorn, Johann Chrysostomus Geisenhofer. Wasserburg: Heimatverein, 2012.

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8

Michael Laube: Space Reloaded. Kerber Verlag, 2017.

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9

Michael Laube In Between. Hatje Cantz Publishers, 2010.

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10

Harald, Szeemann, and Watari-um, eds. LightSeed: Cy Twombly, Wolfgang Laib, Michel Verjux. Tokyo: Watari-um, 1990.

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11

Hentschel, Anja, Gerrit Hornung, and Silke Jandt, eds. Mensch - Technik - Umwelt: Verantwortung für eine sozialverträgliche Zukunft. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748910770.

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Alexander Roßnagel celebrated his 70th birthday on September 13, 2020. The jubilee has shaped innovative research approaches in many areas of environmental and technology law. His interdisciplinary studies often include methodological advancements and combine specific design problems with important questions of fundamental rights and social cooperation – always aiming at responsible decisions for a socially acceptable future. The articles of the festschrift concern many facets of his work and bring together legal and interdisciplinary perspectives on essential challenges regarding the design of legal norms and innovative technologies, privacy and data protection, the conception and regulation of digitization, environmental regulation and organizational development. With contributions by Christiane Borchard, Benedikt Buchner, Alfred Büllesbach, Ernestine Dickhaut, Alexander Dix, Peter Dräxler, Christoph Ewen, Lothar Fischer, Martin Führ, Shizuo Fujiwara, Kurt Geihs, Christian Ludwig Geminn, Rüdiger Grimm, Volker Hammer, Anja Hentschel, Eric Hilgendorf, Michel-A. Horelt, Gerrit Hornung, Silke Jandt, Andreas Janson, Paul C. Johannes, Dieter Klumpp, Nicole Krämer, Michael Kreutzer, Herbert Kubicek, Robert Kuhn, Christel Kumbruck, Jörn Lamla, Philip Laue, Jan Marco Leimeister, Natalie Maier, Fabiano Menke, Hans-Jürgen Müggenborg, Günter Müller, Bernhard Nagel, Maxi Nebel, Uwe Neuser, Tadashi Otsuka, Ulrich Pordesch, Niklas Radenbach, Philipp Richter, Gerhard Roller, Peter Rott, Christoph Schnabel, Roland Steidle, Martin Steinebach, Gerd Stumme, Ali Sunyaev, Mayu Terada, Wolfgang Thaenert, Michael Waidner, Thilo Weichert, Tsuneharu Yonemaru
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12

Wee Little Lamb. Simon and Schuster, 2009.

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13

Huddleston, Courtney, and Verity Weaver. Lab Mice Heist. North Star Editions, 2019.

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14

Lab Mice Heist. North Star Editions, 2019.

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15

Williams, Amanda. The understanding of social effects in pain. Edited by Paul Farquhar-Smith, Pierre Beaulieu, and Sian Jagger. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198834359.003.0077.

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The landmark paper discussed in this chapter is ‘Social modulation of pain as evidence for empathy in mice’, published in 2006 by Langford et al. in Mogil’s lab at McGill University, Montreal. It elegantly demonstrated (1) that mice observed and responded to one another’s pain—effectively, socially mediated hyperalgesia; (2) that this was modulated by the nature of the social relationship, occurring between cagemates but not strangers; (3) that the mechanism in the observing mouse involved central sensitization, not local effects. The interactive behaviour met requirements for empathic responding; neither imitation nor emotional contagion could account for these effects. The findings have implications for lab pain research using rodents, for understanding of empathic responses in animals, and for understanding animal social behaviour more widely.
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16

Mary Had a Little Lamb. London, UK: Haldane Mason Ltd., 2007.

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17

Lau, Thomas, Volker Reinhardt, and Rüdiger Voigt, eds. Edmund Burke. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748925644.

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Edmund Burke is considered the father of conservatism. With his ‘Reflections on the French Revolution’ (1790), Burke presented a work that was already controversial at the time of its publication. In Burke’s understanding, people and their social institutions are historical beings that are subject to change but unchanging in the face of all change. The central concept in Burke’s argument is heritage, which encompasses both collective, historical memory and social organisation, and specifically refers to constitutional traditions. Society is hierarchically structured and forms an organic unit based on a necessary balance between the principles of continuity and regeneration. According to Burke, the state is the coagulated historical rationality of people who must be taken at least as seriously as contemporaries in their efforts to shape a good order. With contributions by Michael Becker, Norbert Campagna, Oliver Hidalgo, Jürgen Kamm, Skadi Siiri Krause, Thomas Lau, Ulrich Niggemann, Henning Ottmann, Volker Reinhardt and Rüdiger Voigt.
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18

Miller, Craig A. A Time for All Things. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190073947.001.0001.

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Born in 1908 in Lake Charles, Louisiana, Michael DeBakey is the eldest of six children of Lebanese immigrants. He enjoys conspicuous academic success as a youth and then medical school, displaying intelligence and originality. DeBakey comes under the tutelage of surgery professor Alton Ochsner. He also spends a year training in Europe. Debakey and Ochsner publish important research papers. In World War Two DeBakey is assigned to the Office of the Army Surgeon General, where he excels in administration, rising to the rank of Colonel. He serves beyond the war’s end, contributing to the foundation of postwar federal medical research and veterans’ care. In 1948 he becomes Chair of Surgery at Baylor University medical school in Houston. The department focuses clinical and research efforts on vascular diseases, and leads a revolution in the surgical approach to these problems. DeBakey’s own family suffers from his devotion to his work. In the 1960s DeBakey’s fame grows. His lab pursues an artificial heart. Colleague Denton Cooley implants the first artificial heart with a device taken from DeBakey’s lab, and a forty-year rift between these two giants ensues. DeBakey becomes President, then Chancellor of the Baylor medical school. After the death of his first wife, he remarries in the 1970s. His fame and influence are worldwide. DeBakey operates on the Shah of Iran, and is consulted on the heart surgery of Boris Yeltsin. He is awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2008, and dies shortly afterward at age 99, a universally-admired legend.
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